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The majority of Alabama's colleges and universities are accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS), [4] although several are accredited by the Association for Biblical Higher Education (ABHE), [5] the Council on Occupational Education (COE), [6] or the Distance Education Accrediting Commission (DEAC).
The institution was formed at the suggestion of Joseph Henry Johnson, a former instructor at the Georgia School for the Deaf in Cave Spring. [7] He left that school in 1858 and corresponded with Alabama Governor Andrew B. Moore and State Superintendent of Education William Perry about opening a similar facility in the neighboring state.
J. F. Ingram State Technical College (ISTC) is a community college in Deatsville, Alabama. As of the Fall 2010 semester, ISTC has an enrollment of 543 students, [1] all of whom are incarcerated adults. The college was founded in 1965 and was named for John Fred Ingram, director of Alabama's vocational education program from 1957 until 1969. [2]
The college also offers a continuing education and adult skills training program as well as a training for existing business and industry program through the Alabama Department of Economic and Community Affairs Workforce Development division. [18] [20] Drake State has transfer agreements with every public four-year institution in Alabama. The ...
Lurleen B. Wallace Community College (LBWCC) is a public community college with campuses in Andalusia, Greenville, Opp, and Luverne, Alabama. As of the fall 2010 semester, the college has an enrollment of 1,790 students across all campuses. [2] The college was founded in 1969 and named for Governor Lurleen Burns Wallace. In 1992, it opened the ...
Within the first calendar year of enrollment in the M.Div. degree, students are required to attend a retreat and become part of a spiritual formation group. As a part of their development, students participate in M.Div. chapels, journaling, and personal interaction with the Director of the Graduate Program to help them develop as Christian leaders.
It was the Institute of Careers Officers from the late 1960s until October 1991, becoming the Institute of Career Guidance from 22 October 1991, and the Institute of Career Guidance from 1 November 2000. [2] In the 1960s, its staff were widely referred to as youth employment officers; there were around 1,500 of these by 1965. [3]